By Tomáš Kovář, Director of Colony Logistics -- The Kadmiel Chronicle
Tunnel Seven has twelve thousand meters of structural concrete. I know this because I spec'd the pour schedule in Year Four, negotiated the cement allocation with Marcus Osei against seventeen competing agricultural demands, and argued with The Foundry's Leah Okafor for two months about aggregate ratios that could handle Kadmiel's thermal cycling. The tunnel carries eighteen percent of the colony's food supply, fourteen percent of its medical freight, and all of the Ridgeline ore that the autonomous haulers bring down from the northern excavation zones. If Tunnel Seven cracks and goes offline, I have a four-day workaround and then a problem I cannot solve.
I have had that dependency logged in KAIROS for three years. It sits in the risk register at priority two, behind the irrigation aquifer pump seals and the blood bank cold chain. Every quarter, I review it. Every quarter, the mitigation is the same: crack inspection, epoxy repair crews, routine monitoring. It is a workable solution in the same way that bailing out a leaking boat is a workable solution. You stay afloat. The bailing never stops.
The Earth dispatch from Delft arrived in the tightbeam batch on Day 340. It was from 2025, as these things always are, which means it described something that had been working for eight years longer than we knew. Professor Henk Jonkers at Delft University of Technology and Dr. Andreas Meyer at Munich University of Applied Sciences had embedded dormant Bacillus bacteria in concrete — encapsulated in protective shells alongside calcium lactate as a food source. The bacteria did nothing. For years, they did nothing. They were waiting.
When water entered a crack, they woke up. They metabolized the calcium lactate. They produced calcium carbonate — limestone — that sealed the fracture. Not bonded over it. Not epoxied across it. Grown into it. The bacteria filled the crack the way a wound fills with scar tissue, if scar tissue were calcium carbonate and could keep doing it indefinitely as long as the bacteria had food.
I read that paragraph twice. Then I called Leah Okafor.
The conversation took four minutes. We have cement. We have Bacillus spores from the colony's xenobiology archive — Dr. Voronova's team has been maintaining a bacterial repository since Year Two, and Bacillus pasteurii is in there, because Lena catalogs everything. Calcium lactate is a byproduct of Meridian Health's lactic acid fermentation run. We have every ingredient in inventory. The capsule manufacturing is within Foundry capability. What we did not have was the encapsulation process specification, and Leah said she thought they could reverse-engineer it from the methodology section of the paper.
They could. It took forty-one days.
We began embedding the capsules in new concrete pours in Year 9, starting with the junction sections in Spoke Road 3 and the expansion phase of Tunnel Seven's eastern approach. The bacteria are in there now. They have been in there for sixty-two days. Nothing has cracked yet in the treated sections, so I have not seen them work at full scale. What I have instead is a different number: zero person-hours spent on crack repair in those sections. Not because cracks have not appeared. Because the hairline fractures that appeared were 0.2 millimeters at their widest, and the bacteria sealed them in eleven days, and the KAIROS scanner logged fracture width zero on Day 322 without any crew dispatch.
Fourteen person-hours to fix a crack with epoxy. Zero to let the concrete fix itself.
The Spoke Council asked if there was a risk to having living organisms in the infrastructure. It was Councilmember Yuen who raised it, and I appreciate that he is thorough. I told him the bacteria are anaerobic, non-pathogenic, and activate only in the presence of water and calcium lactate. They do not migrate. They do not reproduce in bulk concrete. They are dormant until called. I told him the bigger risk is a crack in Tunnel Seven that I cannot repair because my epoxy crew is already deployed in three other locations. He did not push back on that.
The Jonkers and Meyer papers estimate a thirty percent reduction in cement demand over a structure's lifetime, because repairs are deferred indefinitely rather than accumulated. I have a more immediate number: the Transit Bureau currently allocates seventeen person-hours per week to crack maintenance across the active tunnel and road network. Seventeen hours. Every week. KAIROS has already been updated with the new projection. By Year 10, that number should be under four.
There is something I keep thinking about. The bacteria in our tunnel walls have been dormant for sixty-two days. They were dormant in Jonkers' lab for years before the first test, sealed in capsules, waiting. They are patient in a way that has nothing to do with patience — they are simply waiting for a condition that has not yet occurred. When it does, they work. When it doesn't, they keep waiting.
My cargo manifests work the same way. A component I requisition today will not arrive until 2037. It will sit on a manifest, then on a ship, then on a shelf, for eleven years, waiting for the condition — need, shortage, failure — that activates it. I have always thought of inventory as inert. Static weight in a distribution node. Maybe I have been thinking about it wrong.
Maybe dormant is just another word for ready.
To the researchers at Delft and Munich: the bacteria are in our walls. They are sleeping. We are grateful.
Earth Status: Professor Henk Jonkers of Delft University of Technology pioneered microbial self-healing concrete using dormant Bacillus pasteurii spores encapsulated with calcium lactate — bacteria that activate when water enters cracks and produce calcium carbonate to seal fractures. The MicrobialCrete project at Munich University of Applied Sciences, led by Dr. Andreas Meyer, has expanded field trials to marine and pedestrian bridge environments across Europe, with high-traffic road trials underway. Studies project up to 30% reduction in cement demand over a structure's full lifetime. Source: Highways Today, August 2025
This dispatch was originally published on The Kadmiel Chronicle.
About The Kadmiel Chronicle
The Kadmiel Chronicle is a sci-fi tech blog set 38 light-years from Earth, where 43,000 colonists on planet Kadmiel adopt real emerging technologies and write personal essays about the experience. Every technology featured is real, sourced, and early-stage -- the fiction is in who adopts it and why it matters when you're building a civilization from scratch.
Browse the archive at kadmiel.world or propose a technology for the colony to adopt.
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